BY G. A. WATERIIOU.SE. 261 



witli ati orange l)lotcli jusfc beyond end of cell, a marginal band of 

 red widest at anal angle, narrowing and receding from margin 

 towards apex; in this l^and three black spots, that on anal lobe 

 often wanting. Tail nearly j in. long, black. Cilia brown. 



Underside. — ■Foren)lng grey, a l>lack spot at end of cell, a 

 black discal Wand, a yellowish suffusion corresponding to spot of 

 upperside, outer margin brown. Cilia pale brown. Hindwing 

 grey, a black spot bordered with white at end of cell, above 

 which is an elongate spot; marginal red band bounded internally 

 by white, externally by black; round black caudal and anal spots, 

 an ovoid black spot aV>ove anal angle. Cilia black towards anal 

 angle, pale brown towards apex. 



9. 14-17 mm. (16). Shape as in ^J, with forewing broader. 



Upperside as in. (J, orange spot of forewing larger, not 

 divided by dark nervules, spot and band of hindwing larger. 



U n d e r s i d e as in rj, with spots and bands larger, sometimes 

 a broken discal black band to hindwing, usually represented by 

 a single spot near anal angle in ^. 



Mr. F. Brown has bred specimens from Katoomba, N.S.W., 

 with white cilia and groundcolour of underside pure white. 



Loc. — Tasmania, Victoria, New South Wales (^10, 9 7). 



PsEUDONOTis, Druce. 



Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. ii. p. 252, 1894. 



Druce describes his genus as allied to lliysonotls, Hiibn., 

 ( = Diinis, Fabr.), but differing in having costal nervure free from 

 1st subcostal, and one subcostal nervule deficient. The species 

 he includes have all, I believe, a single tail, and are shaped and 

 coloured rather as in Daiiis than as in the group represented by 

 Sithon danis, Feld. No doubt a new genus will yet be erected to 

 contain this spscies, which will also include the Australian form. 



PsEUDONOTis TUR>JEHi, Waterhouse (Plate ii., fig. 28). 

 Proc. Linn. Soc. N.S. Wales, 1902, p. 648. 



(J. 15-17 mm.; 9. 12-15 mm. Subcostal only two-branched, 1st 

 branch free from though close to costal nervure. 

 Zoc. —Cairns, Q. ((J 1, 9 2). 



